Plus ça change: Quebec reverses fracking ban
The province will allow the technique. But it may be too little too late
Quebec's National Assembly has taken the first steps to reversing a decade-long ban on hydraulic fracturing, moving closer to opening what could prove to become one of North America's largest shale plays. The province was the first Canadian jurisdiction to implement a formal fracking moratorium, in 2006, then moving to implement a full ban in 2014. But the new Liberal government has now reversed course by issuing drilling licences to a local partnership led by Montreal's Pétrolia, called Hydrocarbures Anticosti, to conduct a C$100m ($70m) exploration programme on Anticosti Island in the Gulf of St Lawrence, off Canada's east coast. Drilling on the remote outpost has gone on for decades. Thes
Also in this section
7 May 2024
Ample stocks and a soft demand outlook will limit how much LNG Europe can import this year
3 May 2024
Upcoming elections are likely to deliver a win for the party of president Andres Lopez Obrador, but analysts differ over to what degree his successor will stick to his energy policies
2 May 2024
Faster-than-expected economic growth fails to mask macro imbalances and shifting structural oil product trends
1 May 2024
Energean CEO Mathios Rigas looks to results of critical Anchois appraisal well